Abstract

Hydrocarbon columns in Pliocene sands of offshore SE Trinidad occur in 3-way closure, primarily in the footwall of normal faults. Multiple reservoir sands and numerous fault blocks result in a large number of individual hydrocarbon accumulations. Fault-plane sections demonstrate that fault sealing is unrelated to juxtaposition of intercalated shales. These fault-zone capillary seals were studied by (1) inferring their fluid-flow properties from the pattern of trapped hydrocarbons and (2) direct examination and measurement of cored faults. Buoyancy pressures for hydrocarbon columns were calculated from fluid property data for each reservoir and fault block. Buoyancy pressures range widely, increasing nonlinearly with fault displacement and percent shale in the faulted section, but do not vary systematically with stratigraphic position or depth. Small-displacement faults observed in core are narrow zones of cataclasis within porous sandstone. Mercury injection tests indicate fault-zone displacement pressures that coincide with buoyancy pressures calculated for hydrocarbon columns sealed by large-displacement faults. The agreement between measured displacement pressures and calculated buoyancy pressures indicates that (1) the reservoirs are filled to their capacity, dictated by the displacement pressure of the fault zones, and (2) the fault-zone seals are primarily the product of deformation of the sands, with some enhancement by incorporation more » of argillaceous material into the fault zones. The observed relationship between fault displacement and calculated buoyancy pressure of the hydrocarbon columns implies that fault-zone continuity is a factor that needs to be assessed in fault-zone seal analysis. « less

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